B.C. golf star Adam Hadwin looks for early PGA Tour win in 2018

Abbotsford-raised golfer Adam Hadwin during a practice round before the Sentry Tournament of Champions at the Plantation Course at Kapalua Golf Club on Jan. 2 in Lahaina, Hawaii.Sam Greenwood / Getty Images

Coming off a season filled with milestones, Adam Hadwin believes there is no reason he can’t return to his winning ways early in 2018.

The Canadian golfer will play his second tournament of the year next week at the CareerBuilder Challenge in La Quinta, Calif., an event where he has found a lot of success. He finished runner-up there in 2017 on the heels of his record 13-under-par 59 during the third round, and was sixth in 2016.

“You can’t go to a place where you played well and finished second at the previous year and not think that you have a chance to win the golf tournament, that’s for sure,” Hadwin said from his home in Phoenix.

“My biggest hope is that people don’t expect me to shoot 59 again,” he added with a laugh. “At least now I know when I get going low in rounds, I’ve gone really low before and it’s nothing new.”

Hadwin had a career year in 2016-17, earning more than US$3.4 million, finishing 26th on the FedEx Cup standings and becoming Canada’s top-ranked male golfer. He earned first PGA Tour victory, became just the eighth golfer in history to fire a sub-60 round on Tour, and became just the third Canadian to ever play in the Presidents Cup.

The breakout season earned him a spot in all four of golf’s major championships in 2018. As a result, his schedule this year will be built around the majors (a “good problem to have,” he said) and may not include the two-tournament Texas swing in May he has done in the past.

He’s never played the FedEx St. Jude Classic in Memphis, Tenn., but wants to add that event this year, the week before the U.S. Open in June.

Adam Hadwin of Canada plays a shot during the pro-am tournament prior to the Sentry Tournament of Champions at Plantation Course at Kapalua Golf Club on Jan. 3, 2018 in Lahaina, Hawaii.Gregory Shamus /
Getty Images

The 30-year-old from Abbotsford has won on every level of golf from the junior ranks in British Columbia through college and on golf’s developmental tours, and says last year’s breakthrough on the PGA Tour was a combination of lots of hard work and getting some breaks.

“Obviously, I had been trending in the right direction and it just all came together that week. It was nice to play well under the gun and have things go your way,” he said. “There was a little bit of a monkey off your back, but after the last five or six months the monkey is right back on it, to be honest.”

Hadwin said his iron play is the key area he’s hoping to improve as the 2017-2018 PGA Tour season ramps up. He admitted he wasn’t hitting as many greens as he should be last season, but his putting saved him.

“When I’m good, I’m good, and I hit a ton of greens, but it just hasn’t been very consistent the last couple years,” he said. “That’s what we’re after now, just dialling in that consistency in certain situations.

“We’re going to dive into stats a little bit more, whatever the case is, and really figure out why I’m not as consistent as I should be.”

Hadwin burst onto the scene in 2011 when he finished tied for fourth at the RBC Canadian Open at Vancouver’s Shaughnessy Golf and Country Club, just over an hour from where he grew up. He explained he never wanted that result to be the defining moment in his career. With a victory now under his belt, he’s looking for more in 2018 and beyond.

“I’m at the point where I don’t want the win to be the defining moment of my career either. I don’t want it to be ‘blah’ after that. I’m always striving for more, always trying to get better, and always looking for win No. 2, then win No. 3, and so on and so on for the rest of my career,” he said.

Last year was a big year off the course as well for Hadwin, who got married, bought his first home, and bought a dog — a cava-poo-chon cross-breed named Brad.

“My wife chose the name Brad, and I extended it to Bradford,” he said. “She likes human names for dogs, which I’m fine with. He’s turned out to be a total ‘Brad.’ I don’t know why but it fits him so well, with his personality.”

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